Nursery soils should be managed to maintain desirable ranges in essential plant nutrients, organic matter, and available water for the species being produced.In many cases, however, soil fertility and available water far exceed the amounts needed to produce loblolly pine seedlings of the size range required for artificial regeneration. Top clipping and root pruning or...

White oak (Quercus alba L.) and northern red oak (Q. rubra L.) acorns were collected locally or from seed orchards in October 2002. Mean acorn moisture content (MC) was 48 percent for white oak and 39 percent for northern red oak. These acorns were air dried to different MCs before being sown into nursery beds in early December...

Stem diameter growth of 9-year-old sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua) trees was measured and related with the activity of sucrose synthase (SS), an enzyme that has been associated with carbon sink strength in agriculture crops and tree seedlings. In 1984, 10 sweetgum seedlings were transplanted to control plots and plots amended with sewage sludge or nitorgen and...

The hardwood forests of the southern U.S. are not naturally composed of singe predominant species. The diversity of tree species within these stands is one of the qualities that make them so valuable for multiple use stand management. While many of the best hardwood sites have been planted to pines since the 1950's, some proportion of these pine stands now being...

Open-pollinated white oak (Quercus alba L.) acorns were collected and stored at 4 °C in November 2004. Three days before sowing in early December, we treated germinating acorns in five ways: no surgery (C); one half of the radical cut off (HR); whole radicle cut off (WR); one cotyledonary petiole severed (OP); and both cotyledonary petioles severed,...

Frequency distribution and heritability of first-order later root (FOLR) numbers in 1-0 seedlings were followed for 5 years for 115 different half-sib seedlots from the Georgia Forestry Commission's Arrowhead and Baldwin Seed Orchards. In 1986 and 1987, seedlings were permitted unrestricted growth under management conditions similar to those practiced in most...

One-year-old nursery-grown bare-root sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua L.) seedlings were lifted and transplanted into a nearby nursery bed or a cleared forest field in January 1994. Seedlings remaining in the same bed for the second year were the nontransplanted controls. Seedlings growing in beds were watered regularly and those in field received...

Open-pollinated, half-sib northern red oak (Quercus rubra L.) 1-0 seedlings were grown under an improved nursery protocol. Minimum seedling grading standards for this test were six first-order lateral roots, 8-cm root-collar diameter, and 0.7-m height. At the Brasstown site on a salvage clearcut in North Georgia, we spot-applied glyphosate herbicide...

Five to seven years after being graded by first-order lateral root (FOLR) numbers and outplanted, loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) seedlings were excavated using a commercial tree spade and root systems reevaluated. Current competitive position of trees was related to initial FOLR numbers of 1-0 seedlings. Current FOLR numbers were comparable among tree size classes, but...

It is generally accepted that large preharvest advanced oak regeneration is required for maintaining a significant oak component in future stands. However, developing advanced oak regeneration on productive sites has been difficult because stand prescriptions encouraging oak regeneration are the same conditions that favor development of potentially faster growing...

Northern red oak (Quercus rubra L., NRO) and white oak (Q. alba L., WO) are among the most valuable oak species in the eastern Untied States and throughout the eastern provinces of Canada. They have a broad geographic distribution: yet no single regeneration mechanism can explain their presence in current stands. Both species...

There is intense concern among forest resource managers about the rapid decline in the northern red oak (NRO) component of high quality mesic sites throughout the United States. Currently this versatile oak species, so important for its lumber value as well as its dietary staple status for hundreds of wildlife species, is being replaced by hardwood species that lack...

Natural regeneration of oak (Quercus) species in the USA has been easy to obtain on the lower quality xeric sites (site index less than or equal to 20 m at age 50) by developing advanced oak reproduction before stands are harvested. This approach has not been successful with Q. rubra, Q. pagoda, or Q. alba...